Skip to main content

Walking Contradiction

Someone who is constantly talking nonsense but thinks he/she is spitting nothing but the facts and is just a prime example of a walking contradiction
Troy Birtell is the perfect example of a walking contradiction. End of story.
by Everyoneandanyone March 8, 2010
mugGet the Walking Contradiction mug.

M-Contradiction

To accept a statement or already formed opinion and agree with it- only to disagree and argument against it, within one sentence.
"I already said, that i agree with you on that, BUT i dont think that i can really agree with that."
"There it is, Again another M-Contradiction!"
by Irksofkhocoamrjvoalw June 21, 2022
mugGet the M-Contradiction mug.

The law of non-contradiction

A thing cannot be itself and it's opposite. But things can be duplicitous and they can have two different names.
Hym "The law of non-contradiction does not apply to God. Do laws apply to God now? Who makes the laws to which God is subject? You? That's why imitating the creature is wrong.
by Hym Iam July 22, 2022
mugGet the The law of non-contradiction mug.

Performative contradiction

imsoconfused#8999
by Chamwastaken November 20, 2020
mugGet the Performative contradiction mug.
The radical philosophical principle that two contradictory statements can indeed both be true at the same time, challenging the foundational law of non-contradiction that has guided Western logic for millennia. The principle of possible contradiction acknowledges that reality is often more complex than binary logic allows—that someone can love you and hurt you, that a system can be both successful and unjust, that you can want something and not want it simultaneously. This principle is especially relevant in politics, economics, and human relationships, where simplistic either/or thinking fails to capture nuance. Critics say it's just an excuse for sloppy thinking; proponents say it's the only way to think clearly about a world that refuses to be simple.
Example: "She invoked the principle of possible contradiction when he said capitalism couldn't both create wealth and increase inequality. 'It's doing both,' she said. 'Right now. Simultaneously. The contradiction isn't in my argument; it's in the system. Reality doesn't care about your logic.' He couldn't accept that two contradictory things could both be true, which meant he couldn't see the world as it actually was."
by Dumu The Void February 15, 2026
mugGet the Principle of Possible Contradiction mug.
The principle that two propositions can contradict each other in some spectral dimensions while aligning in others, making contradiction a matter of degree rather than an absolute binary. Two arguments can be contradictory on the truth-value spectrum but aligned on the evidence-quality spectrum, or opposed on the conclusion spectrum but parallel on the methodology spectrum. The law of possible spectral contradiction allows for nuanced relationships between ideas that simple logic would declare irreconcilable. It's the logic of "we agree on the facts but disagree on what they mean," of "same evidence, different interpretations," of "contradictory but not incommensurable."
Example: "She and her colleague appeared to contradict each other—she said the policy would help, he said it would hurt. But under the law of possible spectral contradiction, they aligned on the evidence spectrum (same data), diverged on the interpretation spectrum (different models), and met again on the values spectrum (both wanting to help). The contradiction was real but limited, which made conversation possible."
by AbzuInExile February 16, 2026
mugGet the Law of Possible Spectral Contradiction mug.
The stronger principle that contradiction itself exists on a spectrum—that statements aren't simply contradictory or not contradictory but can be more or less contradictory depending on which spectra you examine. Two claims can be completely contradictory on one spectrum, partially contradictory on another, and perfectly aligned on a third. The law of spectral contradiction acknowledges that "A and not-A" is rarely the whole story—usually it's "A in some respects, not-A in others, and somewhere-in-between in still others." This law is the foundation of productive disagreement, because it allows parties to identify exactly where their contradiction lives rather than assuming it's total.
Example: "Their political views seemed completely contradictory—she was progressive, he was conservative. But under the law of spectral contradiction, they found alignment on the anti-corruption spectrum, divergence on the government-intervention spectrum, and complicated partial alignment on the individual-liberty spectrum. The contradiction wasn't total; it was spectral. They still disagreed, but they knew exactly where, which was progress."
by AbzuInExile February 16, 2026
mugGet the Law of Spectral Contradiction mug.

Share this definition

Sign in to vote

We'll email you a link to sign in instantly.

Or

Check your email

We sent a link to

Open your email